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Alphabetical    [«  »]
boars 1
bodies 20
bodily 5
body 110
boiled 2
boiling 7
bolt 1
Frequency    [«  »]
124 them
122 being
119 more
110 body
108 then
108 when
106 must
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

body

    Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | the water contained in the body causes by its currents the 2 I, 1 | and colour. And yet a dead body has exactly the same configuration 3 I, 1 | same way no part of a dead body, such I mean as its eye 4 I, 1 | by which the hand or the body was fashioned into its shape? 5 I, 1 | exactly in the same way the body, which like the axe is an 6 I, 1 | instrument-for both the body as a whole and its several 7 I, 1 | the same way, I say, the body, if it is to do its work, 8 I, 3 | purely immaterial; nor can a body, independently of its condition, 9 I, 3 | the functions common to body and soul, by Flying, for 10 I, 4 | organs, or of the whole body, that has determined the 11 I, 5 | special action, so the whole body must be destined to minister 12 I, 5 | the saw. Similarly, the body too must somehow or other 13 II, 1 | functions and operations of the body are carried on by these; 14 II, 1 | or executive parts of the body are compounded out of bones, 15 II, 1 | and the same part of the body, as was stated in a former 16 II, 2 | as they are in the living body. Such are blood, serum, 17 II, 2 | the lower halves of the body; and, dealing with classes, 18 II, 2 | how many these may be. A body then is in one sense said 19 II, 2 | it is impossible for one body to be hotter than another 20 II, 3 | they remain in the living body, but become perceptibly 21 II, 3 | consistent while in the body, but when withdrawn under 22 II, 3 | and intestines into the body at large, and to which these 23 II, 3 | subserve the nutrition of the body. They also explain why no 24 II, 4 | timorous. For fear chills the body; so that in animals whose 25 II, 4 | as the blood is in the body, it is kept fluid by animal 26 II, 4 | material of which the whole body is made. For nutriment supplies 27 II, 5 | on the fleshy part of the body, and is of an easily concocted 28 II, 5 | destructive. For were the whole body formed of them it would 29 II, 5 | blood. Were then the whole body composed of these substances, 30 II, 7 | of all the parts of the body there is none so cold as 31 II, 7 | all the fluid parts of the body it is the driest and the 32 II, 7 | preservation of the whole body. For some writers assert 33 II, 7 | is from the centre of the body upwards. It is then as a 34 II, 7 | are present in the animal body at the time of birth have 35 II, 8 | essential constituent of their body. Its right to this precedence 36 II, 8 | substance is situated within the body, while in some of the bloodless 37 II, 8 | separated from the rest of the body. Thus in the Cephalopods 38 II, 8 | Cephalopods the main bulk of the body consists of a soft flesh-like 39 II, 8 | internal part, because the body, or, as it is termed in 40 II, 8 | hard parts, but the whole body is hard, the hardness, however, 41 II, 8 | purpose of this is to make the body of the insect less liable 42 II, 9 | whole. For no bone in the body exists as a separate thing 43 II, 9 | all the other bones of the body are in continuity; for it 44 II, 9 | it is necessary that the body of an animal shall bend 45 II, 9 | takes first some solid body as a basis, and round this 46 II, 9 | in fashioning the animal body out of flesh. Thus we find 47 II, 9 | solid foundation of the body requires to be stronger, 48 II, 9 | framework that supports the body to be made of a pliable 49 II, 9 | than in that of the human body. However, not only all these 50 II, 10| in the front part of the body; and lastly because the 51 II, 10| between the eyes. For as the body consists of two parts, a 52 II, 14| animals that have hairs on the body have lashes on the eyelids; 53 II, 14| on the under side of the body; whereas in man the contrary 54 II, 14| posterior surfaces of the body are on an equality as regards 55 II, 14| condition of the rest of the body. For nature invariably gives 56 II, 14| general surface of an animal’s body with an excess of hair, 57 II, 16| support the weight of the body, but to serve as hands. 58 II, 16| great size and weight of the body, are reduced to the condition 59 III, 2 | hoof is solid.~Again as the body, so far as regards its organs 60 III, 2 | weakest part of the whole body. Momus was but dull-sighted 61 III, 2 | of the movements of the body than they would be elsewhere.~ 62 III, 2 | matter is used in the animal body to form bone. But in the 63 III, 2 | the upper portion of the body, and this is allotted by 64 III, 2 | is not secreted from the body in the shape of horns, it 65 III, 3 | front and centre of the body that the heart is situated, 66 III, 4 | visible enough when the body is only just formed, and 67 III, 4 | bulk in proportion to the body, than at any later period 68 III, 4 | about the centre of the body, but rather in its upper 69 III, 4 | the necessary part of the body, that is to say of the part 70 III, 4 | viscera and indeed in all the body, there is blood without 71 III, 4 | organ either of the whole body or of the blood. For the 72 III, 4 | the anterior part of the body, in order to prevent that 73 III, 4 | For the motions of the body commence from the heart, 74 III, 4 | serve as supports for the body generally.~In animals of 75 III, 4 | in them the heart, as the body generally, is of large size. 76 III, 4 | on the right side of the body are warmer than those on 77 III, 4 | indeed the only part of the body, that is unable to tolerate 78 III, 5 | extend throughout the whole body.~The reason, then, why these 79 III, 5 | again, are two, because the body of every sanguineous animal 80 III, 5 | distributed throughout the entire body is that in them, or in parts 81 III, 5 | material from which the whole body is made. Now as to the manner 82 III, 5 | throughout the whole of the body. For since each part is 83 III, 5 | blood throughout the whole body, because this blood is the 84 III, 5 | its place, is potentially body and flesh, or substance 85 III, 5 | and especially so when the body is heated, and the mouths 86 III, 5 | that resembled blood, their body having become loose and 87 III, 5 | The widest passages in the body are of all parts the most 88 III, 5 | give compactness to the body. For when they reach the 89 III, 5 | and posterior parts of the body more closely knit together. 90 III, 5 | in the upper part of the body, between the vessels that 91 III, 6 | tempering the heat of the body; and in sanguineous animals, 92 III, 6 | again, tends to make the body erect; and thus it is that 93 III, 7 | reason for this is that the body itself is double, consisting 94 III, 7 | on the right side of the body that is the main cause for 95 III, 7 | there are two sides to the body, a right and a left. For 96 III, 7 | held in connexion with the body. For the vessels give off 97 III, 7 | branches which run to the body through the outstretched 98 III, 7 | the great vessel to the body with the firmness of nails. 99 III, 7 | compactness of the animal body. The liver and spleen assist, 100 III, 7 | were, the citadel of the body.~All sanguineous animals, 101 III, 7 | spleen be too scanty, the body becomes sickly from over-repletion 102 III, 7 | applied to the growth of the body and the formation of scaly 103 III, 7 | because the left side of the body is more watery and colder 104 III, 10| necessary element in the body, inasmuch as it is the recipient 105 III, 10| had been severed from the body, repeat several times the 106 III, 11| add to the weight of the body. Of the membranes those 107 III, 12| reason of this is that the body in both these classes of 108 III, 12| and the healthiness of the body. For these are conditions 109 III, 13| for they lie within the body, whereas the flesh is placed 110 III, 14| with the larger size of the body. For animals with horns


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